Journal of neurosurgery. Spine
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Clinical Trial
Early results after ProDisc-C cervical disc replacement.
Cervical anterior decompression and total-disc replacement is currently being investigated as an alternative treatment in patients with symptomatic intervertebral cervical spondylosis with and without radiculopathy. The authors prospectively investigated the safety and efficacy of using the ProDisc-C disc for cervical arthroplasty in the treatment of symptomatic cervical spondylosis. ⋯ Analysis of preliminary results involving ProDisc-C arthroplasty indicates significant improvement in pain and functional outcome scores. No spontaneous fusions at the level of surgery or at adjacent levels were noted. Long-term follow-up studies will be necessary before more definitive treatment recommendations can be formulated.
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In this study, quantitative gait analysis is used to describe the changes in the kinematic and kinetic parameters of gait after central corpectomy in patients with cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM). ⋯ Gait analysis can be used as a quantitative tool in the pre- and postoperative evaluation of patients with CSM.
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The authors assessed the late outcome of patients with Meyerding Grade I and II isthmic spondylolisthesis (IS) who underwent posterior instrumentation and posterolateral fusion (PLF). Decompression and posterior internal fixation with PLF is the classic surgical treatment for painful low-grade IS. Nevertheless, outcome data are scarce and of limited value mainly because they represent small numbers of patients, short follow-up periods, or both. ⋯ Posterior instrumentation and PLF, with possible neurodecompression, yielded favorable long-term results in this retrospective study of 132 patients with low-grade IS.
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The instrumentation for endoscopic discectomy continues to evolve to allow for acceptable clinical outcomes and expanding applications. The authors describe their experience in using a conical working tube equipped with a guide for angular entry of the telescope to perform endoscopic discectomy in patients with lumbar disc herniation. ⋯ A separate angled entry of the telescope shortens the effective length of the working sheath and creates a better working space, thereby allowing greater instrument maneuverability and ability to use conventional neurosurgical instruments. In addition, use of this telescope in other endoscopic procedures reduces overall cost of instrumentation and treatment, and results are comparable to those reported in association with microscopic lumbar discectomy.
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Regionally delivered hypothermia has advantages over systemic hypothermia for clinical application following spinal cord injury (SCI). The effects of local hypothermia on tissue sparing, neuronal preservation, and locomotor outcome were studied in a moderate thoracic spinal cord contusion model. ⋯ Regional cooling applied 30 minutes after a moderate contusive SCI was not beneficial in terms of tissue sparing, neuronal preservation, or locomotor outcome. This method of cooling may reduce blood flow in the injured spinal cord and exacerbate secondary injury.